Category: Black Supremacy

Democrats are still the racist party — only now their neo-KKK is anti-white. When they aren’t busy trying to rob Americans of their God-given right to self-defense, Democrats are busy bringing in foreign replacements to vote for them (colloquially known as “the Great Replacement"). Hollywood, meanwhile, takes an afternoon off raping each other (except Rosie O’Donnell) to mock prayers for the Christians who were slaughtered in Texas. Is it any wonder why many white voters, particularly men, won’t vote for Democrats? To get revenge on us, every day we see another instance of what Democrats claim doesn’t exist: anti-white hatred. Unlike other forms of racial hatred, there is no social stigma against a racial hatred against white people — and liberal Democrats revel in that fact. On the contrary, hating…

There is an alarming difference between black and white reaction to tragedies. The screeching media would have zero doubt as to the “motive.” If Stephen Paddock opened fire on a crowd of 22,000 mostly black attendees at Rick Ross rap concert, the media would have “a motive” in three seconds. Media personalities would be at the top of their lungs screaming for impeachment. Al Sharpton would be leading “peaceful demonstrations” as they burned through downtowns. The nation would be at an absolute fever pitch of hysteria — and it would all be racist Trump’s fault. I’m talking wall-to-wall coverage of shrieking morons with no fragmentation of opinion: nothing but unilateral consensus across the media, the academies, the government, Hollywood and the mob: “no one would attack a crowd of 22,000…

It’s time we start calling things by their proper name. Black supremacy is a curious thing. On the one hand, it’s everywhere. It’s promulgated by black activists, Social Justice Warriors (SJWs), university professors, media pundits and Democrat electors. Every day, in every outlet, all the time. The most obvious example is “Black Lives Matter.” Just three days ago, a black supremacist shot up a predominantly white church in Tennessee. Unlike when notorious white supremacist Dylann Roof shot up a black church in South Carolina, the mayhem in Tennessee has been met with almost total media silence. On the other hand, black supremacy is almost forbidden for white people to talk about. When it is talked about, it is done in the most egregiously dishonest terms, with homages to pseudo-concepts like “oppression”, “patriarchy”, “systemic…